General Information
Project Type
Function / usage: |
Road bridge |
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Material: |
Steel-reinforced concrete composite bridge |
Plan view: |
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Material: |
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Location
Location: |
Hamilton, Waikato, New Zealand |
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Crosses: |
|
Coordinates: | 37° 48' 16.51" S 175° 18' 43.20" E |
Technical Information
Dimensions
main span | 70.1 m | |
width | 26.21 m | |
height | 29.87 m | |
total length | 214.88 m | |
span lengths | 70.1 m - 48.77 m - 60.96 m | |
number of spans | 3 |
Quantities
structural steel | 2 650 t |
Cost
cost of construction | New Zealand dollar 160 200 000 |
Materials
piers |
weathering steel
|
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abutments |
reinforced concrete
|
girders |
weathering steel
|
Excerpt from Wikipedia
Te Ara Pekapeka Bridge (Māori for pathway of the bat) is a girder bridge over the Waikato River in Hamilton, New Zealand, opened to pedestrians and cyclists on Friday 30 August 2024 and known as Peacocke Bridge during construction. The bridge on Wairere Drive is part of the Southern Links, a ring road around Hamilton. It links Hamilton East with a new suburb of Peacocke. Construction started in 2020, though the plan originated in 1962.
The bridge is formed with 2,650 tonnes of steel, was expected to be completed by mid 2024, at a cost of $160.2M, though budgeted at $135M in 2020, estimated at no more than $60M in 2017 and formerly at $40M. The bridge was delayed by COVID-19 and Cyclone Gabrielle and other storms. The 4-lane bridge was designed by Bloxam Burnett & Olliver, and built by HEB Construction. It includes bus lanes and cycle paths, and carries the Peacocke to Pukete sewer line. The river was closed to boats during construction.
Both banks of the river were stabilised to support the bridge. The north bank, next to the bridge abutments, has a 50-degree slope, rising 45 metres (148 ft), or 35 metres (115 ft), and was stabilised with 150-millimetre (5.9 in) soil nails. The total length of the bridge is 215 metres (705 ft), including the 11-metre-high (36 ft) mechanically stabilised earth wall of the southern bridge abutment, which is on compressible, loose Taupō Pumice alluvial soils, of the river terraces. The bridge itself is 180 metres (590 ft) long (made up of a 70-metre (230 ft) northern span, 50-metre (160 ft) central span and a 60-metre (200 ft) southern span), 26.2 metres (86 ft) wide, on 38-metre-deep (125 ft), closely spaced, bridge piles, with 35-metre-long (115 ft) earth anchors and over 600 eight-metre-long (26 ft) soil nails. The bridge is over 30 metres (98 ft) above the normal river level.
The main support is a pier on the south bank of the river, formed of weathering steel, in two lattice-shaped, 30-by-22-metre (98 ft × 72 ft) Y sections, each weighing over 200 tonnes. The lattice is made up of 2.2-by-0.82-metre (7.2 ft × 2.7 ft) box-section welded plates. They were lifted into position by a 600-tonne crane.
The bridge was designed to minimise its impact on 54 rest sites of the critically endangered long-tailed bat (pekapeka-touroa), including 30 new roost boxes on trees, with metal bands above and below them to keep predators out, use of warm LED lighting, a shallow bridge profile and removal of vegetation below the bridge so they can fly under, creation of a tree canopy to keep them away from traffic and predator control to protect, bats, copper skinks, native birds and the new trees.
The bridge was opened by Paula Southgate and Simeon Brown, though the plaque on the bridge also records the name of Kīngi Tūheitia, who died on the morning of the bridge opening.
Text imported from Wikipedia article "Peacocke Bridge" and modified on November 29, 2024 according to the CC-BY-SA 4.0 International license.
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data sheet - Structure-ID
20089821 - Published on:
28/11/2024 - Last updated on:
28/11/2024